pelvic floor | Amazing Kegelmaster - Part 3
Sep 27

Can anyone answer that question for me?
cos I think i have Pelvic Floor Dysfunction and im like 90% sure of it. Been 2 3 years. Im going to go into get a check up. But please someone help answer the question.

PS: i’m female! so it’s not prostate

Are you having problems with incontinence or prolapse?
Sometime pelvic floor exercises will help by improving the muscle tone. They are often called Kegel exercises, after the obstetrician who developed them.

http://www.patient.co.uk/health/Pelvic-Floor-Exercises.htm

Sep 24

Any particular product that is better than others? Do they work? How long does it take to see a difference. What are major effects?

If this thing you’re looking into buying is a device used to strengthen your pelvic floor muscles so that your vagina feels "tighter", then buying it would be unnecessary. You can do Kegal exercises and they will have the same effect. When you’re sitting or standing (in a car, office, etc. anywhere), repeatedly squeeze the muscles that control when you urinate. If you don’t know how to locate these muscles, next time you’re urinating, try to stop the flow by squeezing your muscles down there; you’ve found your pelvic floor muscles. Each time you squeeze, count to three and then release. Do this as often and as much as you want.

Sep 23


Any surgery that involves cutting and sewing will take six weeks for the tissues to gain their full strength.

As far as what you can do and when you can do it, it depends a lot on your overall health and what it is you want/need to do.

As long as you are on any narcotic pain medication, you should not drive.

My guess is that you will be up and about in a day or two, able to get around while taking it easy for a week or two, and feeling pretty good after that. Of course, strenuous activity will be off limits for a while, probably 4-6 weeks.

Sep 22


Really good (no impact), but don’t try to make every jump a world record. Just jump at a cozy rate (you’ll get breathless soon enough).
Each time you’re on the ‘down’ part of the jump, do a kegel (tighten your pelvic floor like you’re holding urine in).
You’ll find your floor tightening in no time.
Best wishes and congratulations on choosing the rebound.
I used to work for Kangoo Jumps (bouncy boots), and also have a mini trampoline at home. It’s the best for so many ailments.

Sep 21


Lmao…..they would have a hard time rescuing it!

Sep 21

i have been doing them for approx 8 month but have not managed to see if the feeling intensified.

try when having sex flexing vaginal muscle – your partner will definitely tell you. or you can insert finger in vagina and then flex muscles and see yourself. it works very well usually.

Sep 20

FEMALE!

You could learn to do kegel exercises, which can be done discretely. Unfortunately, there really isn’t any quick way…the kegels take time to work.

Sep 17


I wrote some advice on a parenting site on how to do pelvic floor exercises. The advice was aimed at a person after she had a baby, but it still has step by step instructions on how to do them.
Click here to take a look. Hope it helps :
http://www.minti.com/parenting-advice/8275/Sex-after-birth/

Sep 17


Everyday in the office…and the best thing is, that nobody can tell…

All jokes aside, it’s important to do them anyways…

Sep 15

Pelvic Floor Exercises and The Bits Below the Belt DVD
Surgery to treat men with prostate cancer is often followed by months of difficulty controlling urine flow, a condition known as urinary incontinence. But new research suggests that this problem may go away more quickly if the men perform certain exercises to strengthen their pelvic floor muscles.
Researchers from the Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in Los Angeles, California, found that men who were taught how to perform pelvic floor exercises before and after surgery were more likely to have regained continence three months later.

Men Doing Pelvic Exercises Recover Earlier

In the current study, the researchers randomly assigned 38 men scheduled for radical prostatectomy to either a treatment group or a control group. The men in the treatment group were referred to a physical therapist. They were instructed how to do Pelvic Floor Exercises both before and after surgery, using biofeedback to ensure they were using the proper muscles. The control group did not receive any formal instruction. All of the men completed questionnaires regarding bladder function at regular intervals over the next year.
Overall, 82% of the patients had regained continence (defined as not needing to use any absorbent pads) by the end of the year, including about equal numbers in both groups. But on average the men who had been educated about Pelvic exercises regained continence about one month earlier than those in the control group (at 12 weeks vs. 16 weeks).
Most of the men who did not regain continence within a year were still using at least three absorbent pads a day, indicating continued severe incontinence. The study authors explained that these men probably had extensive damage to the bladder sphincter or severe dysfunction of the bladder after surgery, and the exercises alone were unable to compensate for this.
But the exercises seemed to be effective. Pelvic floor exercise and education initiated prior to surgery is an effective noninvasive intervention useful for improving early return of urinary continence, the authors concluded. It would certainly have a positive impact on our patients undergoing radical prostatectomy in an effort to improve quality of life after major urological surgery.

The results of the study were published in the Journal of Urology (Vol. 170, No. 1: 130-133)

Pelvic Exercises and The Bits Below the Belt DVD

Associate Professor Pauline Chiarelli is an academic at the University of Newcastle.
She is a leading national and international speaker and the author of many research papers and books on Pelvic floor exercises for men and women. Pauline is widely acknowledged as a leading expert, yet she’s also able to reach out to ordinary men and women and write and explain in a positive, uplifting style as revealed in this DVD.
Pelvic Floor Exercises and the Bits Below the Belt DVD, has 9 Chapters covering
1.Introduction & Bits Below the Belt
2.Bladder Scans
3.Pelvic Floor Exercises
4.Your Exercise Plan
5.PFX Before Surgery
6.Being Boss of Your Bladder
7.Tips for Making You Boss of Your Bladder
8.Moving Forward
9.Credits and References

The DVD can be played as a play all or the various chapters can be selected and reviewed.
This is especial great when reviewing the hands on pelvic exercise chapters.
The DVD goes for approx 25 minutes and gives a total incite into the Pelvic Floor muscles and how to exercise them and the Bits below the Belt.

The viewer is taken into the treatment room a get a better understand of the bladder by watching a bladder scan and watching a pelvic floor muscles being exercised in real time.

There is a also a very visual chapter on how to do pelvic exercises and what the bits below the belt look like when they are working out.

This DVD will assist Australian men to understand their pelvic floor muscles and assist them in pre and post prostate cancer treatment outcomes with incontinency.

Produced by
www.wesytmedia.com
David Westbrook

the DVD is available from www.westymedia.com
or email ivideou@nex.net.au
Associate Professor Pauline Chiarelli

Duration : 0:4:19

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